1 account 2 copy 2 pc

Hi.
I have one account and i bought 2 diablo 3 copy.
Can we play i and my wife in two different pc same time?

Sure, if you have 2 copies. No different than playing with a friend. Might need to register 2nd copy under wife. Wish my wife would play Diablo with me.
:cry:

3 Likes

I have 4 copies in the family. 2 are mine, one is my grand daughter, and the other one is my GF’s when she does play it. I run both of mine at the same time one on a computer and the other on a laptop. Having all these accounts you never have to worry about being level up.

I setup my GF’s where if she ever get sick of playing it I can add it to one of mine. My Davey account and hers have the same owner where the other two don’t. Plus one other thing is I can switch between all the accounts on my computer if I want too.

Stricly speaking account sharing is a breach of the eula and not allowed. Even of you have two separate accounts they are still personal (unless one of them is to be used for a child of yours - or similar). But nobody cares.
It could only be a problem if you and your wife took turns playing the same account around the clock and thus getting flagged for botting.

Or perhaps if you state that you’re breaching the rules on an official forum.

2 Likes

thing is if you bought 2 diablo 3 copies then you have 2 accounts and you and the wife can play at the same time. If you had 1 copy and installed it on 2 pcs then only 1 person can play at a time.

1 Like

Like BigRed/Davey… :smile:
(Not that I wish him any harm :heart:)

1 Like

I believe that you just have to log out and then log in with the other account details (mail and password).

If you only have the one copy you don’t have another account.

2 Likes

Were these two copies bought from a store or from battle.net?

To my knowledge, if an account already has Diablo 3 on it, you can’t add another copy… and if you can, Blizzard owes me another copy of D3 which should have come with my D2R purchase.

If you bought from a physical store, you will need to register those copies to an account. Create a battle.net account for your wife and register one of those copies to her account. The two of you can play together then.

1 Like

so what your saying is all the people out there that have 2 or more account are “breaching the rules on an official forum.” I just do not see how, he like a lot of others here, like to play with their loved ones, but then the others (loved ones) do not always want or have time to play a season so the owner steps in and plays the season.

wow you are just to good for me!!
now go back and read again when I typed.

1 Like

If you wanna play, why not start by reading the opening post, where it’s clearly stated that he has aquired two copies of the game?

then go read my first post!!!

That’s not what I’m saying. Many players have several accounts that they play themselves.

That’s what Blizzard says is “illegal”.

Read 1. A ii. and B ii.

No, you can have 200 accounts and not break the rules as long as you’re the only one playing them. Sharing account with anyone but one minor you’re the legal guardian over is against the rules though.

again wow you just do not want to think, how will blizzard know who is on the computer, if the people play live in another place they would know but if the player lives in the SAME house then how WILL blizzard know. again use your brain!!!

yes I am 1 of many players then have more then 1 account! and yes I have 4 computers in this house, that both me and my wife play on!

Unless you are a parent / guardian, sharing an account with a minor child / ward, then any other sharing of accounts is a breach of the EULA. Just because Blizzard might not be able to detect you’re doing it (e.g. 2 PCs in the same room, one logged in with the husband’s account, one logged in with the wife’s account, husband on one PC, wife on the other, then they swap seats) doesn’t alter the fact that you are in breach.

Not getting caught doing something prohibited isn’t the same as not doing the prohibited thing.

4 Likes

How is their ability or lack thereof of enforcing a rule relevant to the rule existing?

2 Likes

ok you all win, I know not what I’m doing, I have been cheating for over 5 years so kill me now!!